WebJunction releases Blended Learning Guide to help libraries enhance staff training
Mix of online, in-person training methods offer libraries new strategies for continuing education, development
DUBLIN, Ohio, May 4,
2007-WebJunction, OCLC's online community where library staff share
ideas and use online resources to help them in their work, has released
a Blended Learning Guide that mixes online and in-person training
methods to offer libraries new approaches to library staff instruction.
The Blended Learning Guide is available online from the WebJunction site: http://data.webjunction.org/wj/documents/13893.pdf.
"Based on our experience with
blended learning programs at WebJunction and research we have
conducted, we believe that blended learning offers libraries a powerful
strategy for delivering engaging, high-quality training that is
cost-effective," said Marilyn Gell Mason, Executive Director,
WebJunction.
Several WebJunction
programs-the Spanish Language Outreach Program, the Rural Library
Sustainability Program, and the Learning Partner Beta Program, to name
a few-have demonstrated the potential of blended learning to enhance
library staff training. The Blended Learning Guide provides an
introduction to potential tools and offers examples of successful
programs implemented in organizations providing library staff training.
The Blended Learning Guide
offers quick guides of several different modes to blended learning:
Discussion Boards; Online Instant
Messaging/Chat Sessions;
PodCasting; Rapid E-Learning Software Tools; Web Conferencing.
Blended learning case studies are included, as well as resources
to find more information on the topic.
"Library staff rely on quickly
accessing and putting into practice information they need to do their
rapidly changing jobs," said Ms.
Mason. "Blended learning approaches can help library staff more quickly apply new skills to their daily work."
About WebJunction
WebJunction
is a cooperative of library staff sharing and using online resources to
identify and learn about appropriate technologies that can help ensure
relevant, vibrant, sustainable libraries for every community. In
2002, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation awarded OCLC Online
Computer Library Center a three-year grant to build WebJunction as a
portal for public
libraries and other
organizations that provide open access to information. Today,
WebJunction is supported in part by OCLC, grants from the Institute for
Museum and Library Services and the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation, partners in state library agencies and other library
service organizations, and by the library community itself.
About OCLC
Founded in 1967 and
headquartered in Dublin, Ohio, OCLC Online Computer Library Center is a
nonprofit library service and research organization that has provided
computer-based cataloging, reference, resource sharing, eContent and
preservation services to 57,000 libraries in 112 countries and
territories. OCLC and its member libraries worldwide have created
and maintain WorldCat, the world's richest online resource for finding
library materials. For more information, visit www.oclc.org.
OCLC, WorldCat and WebJunction are trademarks and/or service marks
of OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc.
Third-party product, service and business names are trademarks and/or
service marks of their respective owners.
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